Loving Your Adult Children -  Gaye B. Clark

Loving Your Adult Children (eBook)

The Heartache of Parenting and the Hope of the Gospel
eBook Download: EPUB
2024 | 1. Auflage
176 Seiten
Crossway (Verlag)
978-1-4335-8934-8 (ISBN)
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Gospel-Centered Framework for Navigating Relationships with Adult Children As kids grow, so do the pains of parenthood. Patterns of miscommunication and resentment can cause damage over the years, leaving parents and adult children with a fractured relationship. Confused, hurt, and sometimes angry, moms and dads can struggle to know where to turn for help and where to look for hope.  With grace and empathy, author Gaye B. Clark comes alongside readers bearing the weight of parenthood. Encouraging readers to view themselves as image bearers of God first and parents second, Clark shifts readers' focus to their relationship with Christ while showing how the relationship between parent and child can be a catalyst for understanding the gospel. Loving Your Adult Children examines the fruit of the Spirit in relation to parenting adult children, offers study questions for reflection, and shows how walking with God is the best next step for struggling parents.   - Appeals to Parents of Adult Children: Empathetically addresses the pain and suffering associated with parenting  - Lasting Gospel-Centered Hope: Shifts readers' focus from their horizontal relationship with their children to their vertical relationship with Christ  - Biblical Perspective: Discusses each fruit of the Spirit and how they apply to relationships with adult children - Reflective: Study questions provide tools to help readers apply the book's content 

Gaye B. Clark is a registered nurse and has worked with young adults for more than twenty years. Gaye is a widow and mother of two adult children, Anna Wiggins and Nathan Clark, and grandmother of three.

1

Faith

Where did the time go? This quintessential question grips us and messes with our emotions. One car brand captured this feeling perfectly in a commercial that featured a little blond-haired boy who packs up his belongings and puts them into the back of the family car.1 His faithful puppy tags behind. The boy returns to his room for another load. Something feels strange here. His dad, looking out into the hall from a bedroom, raises an eyebrow when he notices an oversized box making its way down the stairs. Then he sees his son juggling the massive package and struggling to keep it upright.

“Buddy, you need some help?”

“No. I’m good.”

A family photo catches the boy’s eye. He stops, adds it to the box, and then heads for the car. As I watch, the knot in my gut tightens. In the garage, Mom clutches a stuffed animal she found in an old chest full of toys. She rummages through the other treasures.

“Hey, do you want these?”

“Why don’t you keep those, Mom?”

He drags a blanket to the car, but his dog pulls it back toward the house. The boy tugs the blanket in return. “Come on, Moe. I have to go.”

Where is this little fella going, and why don’t his parents stop him? His folks join him at the car; an open trunk obscures the view. When Dad shuts the trunk, he and his wife have aged fifteen years. They turn to hug their son, who has transformed into a young adult. The young man then stoops to pet his beloved old dog. “See ya later, Moe.”

The narrator, voice tender with emotion, says, “We always trusted our Subaru would be there for him someday. We just didn’t think someday would come so fast.”

The vehicle pulls away from the drive, his parents hold each other as they watch the car drive out of sight, and the word “love” closes out the one-minute spot. Cue the tissues because we’re all a mess just watching.

Hidden Idols

No pain grabs us quite like parental pain. It seizes our hearts as we raise our children, but more so as they embark on the grand adventure called adulthood. We roll back the video of our kids’ childhood, smile at the happy times, and, if we’re honest, wince at things we regret. Some of us even weep. Is it too late?

Through tears, this is what I’ve heard parents say: “He’s all I’ve got,” “If I lost my daughter, you’d have to just put me in a mental institution,” “He’s my heart and soul,” and “They are everything to me.”

When you have a healthy relationship with your adult children, all can seem right with the world. Research has borne this out—“young adults and their parents perceiving their relationship as good has been associated with low psychological distress and high life satisfaction.”2 But parents and adult children don’t always agree on the state of their relationship.

Parents may believe their relationship is healthier than their adult kids think it is,3 and this mismatch can blindside them when an adult child cuts off communication. One study found that “1 in 4 U.S. adults have become estranged from their families.”4 A Journal of Marriage and Family article reported that 11 percent of mothers ages sixty-five to seventy-five with two or more grown children were estranged from at least one of them.5 Clinical psychologist Dr. Joshua Coleman, who surveyed 1600 estranged parents, explained in an interview,

Ironically . . . estrangement happens because the adult child is in some ways too loved, too taken care of. And one of the consequences of a much more intensive, anxious, guilt-ridden, worried, involved parenting that has been going on in the past three or four decades is that sometimes adult children get too much of the parent, and they don’t know any other way to feel separate from the parent than to estrange themselves.6

Getting too much of a parent—resulting from what is referred to as “helicopter parenting” and identified by a lack of boundaries—is the most common (but certainly not the only) reason adult children distance themselves from their parents. Yet how could caring—or caring too much—for the children God gave us be wrong? Christian counselor Christina Fox writes, “There is a fine line between doing all the necessary things to care for and raise our children and making all that we do be about them.”7 Our outward behavior has an inward motivation. And it all goes back to what or who we treasure.

Worship God Alone

Who are we supposed to treasure? More specifically, who are we to treasure the most? The psalmist writes, “Whom have I in heaven but you? And there is nothing [and no one] on earth that I desire besides you” (Ps. 73:25). Could desires for our children actually be a turning away from this kind of worship, an idolatry?

Tim Keller defines idolatry as

anything more important to you than God, anything that absorbs your heart and imagination more than God, anything that you seek to give you what only God can give. A counterfeit god is anything so central and essential to your life that, should you lose it, your life would hardly be worth living. An idol has such a controlling position in your heart that you can spend most of your passion and energy, your emotional and financial resources on it without a second thought.8

Fox offers a similar definition of idols as turning to another source for “things only God can provide.”9

Overall, parents need both the truth of God’s word and his love to care for their kids without making them an idol. If we point our kids to Christ as we raise them, we will reinforce our primary devotion to God as we offer our children life-giving love and care. Some parents think they can teach their kids the gospel by simply taking them to church. But it isn’t just the church who will give an account before God concerning the care of children—it is primarily mom and dad.

So how are parents doing in this area? What kinds of regular conversations are they having about Jesus with their kids? Do children know how their parents came to Christ? Do children know how God is working in their parents’ lives now? Are parents willing to share some of the mistakes they’ve made and how God’s grace transformed them? Far from making them appear weak in their kid’s eyes, conversations like these can strengthen the bond between parent and child. These conversations empower parents’ faith in God because they remind parents that they are flawed vessels, dependent on the Lord to accomplish anything redemptive.

Model Empathy

A friend, Russel, expressed frustration because his son made careless errors in math that could have easily been avoided if he had only double-checked his work. His son, who tended to rush through many things, didn’t seem convinced that looking over his work would make a significant difference in his grade, let alone a difference in life outside of math class.

Around that time, Russ’s family had to postpone a long-anticipated family vacation. The reason? When balancing his checkbook, Russel had made a math error several weeks earlier. He added an entry that should have been subtracted. When he finally caught the error the following month, several hundred dollars he thought he had saved for the vacation just weren’t there.

He decided to use his own mistake to help his son. With tears in his eyes, he said, “It’s my fault we must postpone our vacation.”10 He explained his error and how he’d forgotten to double-check his work. “This is just one area where math will matter outside of class, son.” Without any lectures or ultimatums, his son’s efforts in math improved. Sometimes we can more effectively point out our child’s shortcomings by using empathy instead of condemnation. Loving God first includes bringing children “up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord” (Eph. 6:4), but discipline isn’t always negative. It can also mean affirming our children when they do right.

Eyes to See the Good

When a mom came by to speak with me about her adult son, she said, “He won’t talk with me.” I happened to know both her and her son well. Mom was a demanding parent who had unrealistic expectations of her children. I asked her, “When was the last time you affirmed your son about anything he said or did? Even the smallest thing would do.” She told me she didn’t know of anything positive to praise. Ouch. No wonder her son refused to speak.

When we are angry with our kids or feel disappointed by them, it can be hard to see the positive. We need to pray for God to give us eyes to see past our frustration and annoyance. Sometimes amazing gifts hide amid the mess.

Historians call Benjamin West one of the great masters among American artists. His paintings line the halls of museums in America and Great Britain. In 1745, when he was seven years old, his mother asked him to look after his baby sister, Sally. When his sister fell asleep, he gathered his ink, paintbrush, and paper and began to work. His tools were homemade and weren’t neatly contained in airtight containers or ziplock bags. Ink spilled everywhere.

His mother’s return startled him. She surveyed the mess in front of her, but she was able to see beyond...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 22.4.2024
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften
ISBN-10 1-4335-8934-6 / 1433589346
ISBN-13 978-1-4335-8934-8 / 9781433589348
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